SPECIFIC RADIOIMMUNOASSAY OF HUMAN β-ENDORPHIN IN UNEXTRACTED PLASMA.*

Abstract
With an antiserum against human beta-endorphin (beta-EP) crossreacting less than 2% with human beta-lipotropin (beta-LPH) by weight we have developed a radioimmunoassay that can detect 1 pg beta-EP in diluted raw plasma. In a.m. fasting plasma of 14 normal subjects beta-EP ranged from less than 5 to 45 pg/ml. beta-EP was elevated in untreated, but normal in successfully treated Cushing's disease; undetectable in a patient with adrenal adenoma; extremely high in Nelson's syndrome; and elevated in a patient with bronchogenic carcinoma before, but undetectable after tumor resection. In subjects with intact hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, beta-EP was undetectable after dexamethasone and increased after metyrapone administration and insulin-induced hypoglycemia. beta-EP concentration was considerably lower in serum than in simultaneously collected plasma, but increased in serum left unfrozen for several hours after clot removal. Thus, beta-EP behaves like a hormone responding to the same stimuli as ACTH and beta-LPH and blood appears to contain enzymes both generating and destroying immunoreactive beta-EP.

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